The Complete Guide For Australian Businesses

What is asset-based lending?

A practical guide for Australian business owners, brokers and advisors. How asset-based lending works, when it makes sense, what it costs, and how it compares to traditional bank finance, cash flow lending and asset finance.

Asset-based lending Australian guide, business owner with equipment

Asset-based lending defined

Asset-based lending is a form of commercial finance where a loan is secured by, and assessed against, the value of a business or personal asset rather than the borrower's credit history, trading record or financial statements. The asset itself is the basis of the lending decision.

In Australia, asset-based lending is most commonly used as a short-term funding solution, with loan terms ranging from 1 to 9 months. Lenders typically advance up to 70% of the asset's value, with loan sizes from $20,000 to $1 million. Settlement is usually same-day once the asset is secured, making asset-based lending a category of choice for time-critical funding needs.

The model is sometimes also referred to as asset-backed lending, asset-secured lending, or simply a cash-out solution. The term "cash-out" specifically describes the borrower's experience (using an existing asset to access cash) rather than the lender's underwriting model.

The simplest way to understand asset-based lending: a bank looks at you. An asset-based lender looks at what you own.

How asset-based lending works

The mechanics differ from a traditional loan in three important ways. Understanding these differences is the key to understanding when asset-based lending is the right tool.

1. The asset, not the borrower, is assessed

Traditional lenders assess the borrower's capacity to repay using credit checks, financial statements, BAS, tax returns and trading history. Asset-based lenders assess the value, liquidity and marketability of the asset offered as security. The borrower's financial profile is largely irrelevant to the lending decision.

2. The asset is held or monitored during the loan term

Because the asset is the security, the lender takes either physical custody or monitored control of it for the duration of the loan. In Australia, the three common structures are:

  • Park It: The asset is physically stored with the lender or a custodial partner (such as a licensed valuer/auctioneer). The borrower collects the asset on repayment.
  • Track It: The asset stays in the borrower's possession and remains in service, but is fitted with GPS tracking. This is common for working equipment that can't come out of service for the loan term.
  • Sell It: Capital is advanced before the asset is sold at auction. The auction proceeds repay the loan, with any surplus returning to the borrower.

3. The term is short and the exit is clear

Asset-based loans are not long-term debt instruments. Typical terms in Australia run 1 to 9 months. The exit is the borrower repaying the loan and collecting the asset, or selling the asset to clear the loan, or refinancing into a longer-term facility once the urgent need is resolved.

When asset-based lending makes sense

Asset-based lending is purpose-built for urgency. The category sits between bank lending (cheaper but slow) and unsecured non-bank lending (faster but rate-priced for higher risk). It is the right tool when time matters more than rate, and when the borrower has an asset of sufficient value to secure the loan.

The most common scenarios that drive asset-based lending enquiries in Australia fall into two groups:

Crisis cases

  • ATO debt and Director Penalty Notices. Tax debt can escalate fast, and traditional lenders are slow to act once enforcement is in motion.
  • Emergency payroll. A timing mismatch between receivables and wages can sink a business in a fortnight.
  • Supplier pressure. A key supplier threatens to stop credit or trade unless arrears clear.
  • Restructure breathing room. A business needs short-term funding to execute a restructure without adding long-term debt.

Opportunity cases

  • Deal closing this week. An acquisition, contract, or commercial transaction that requires capital now.
  • Stock purchase. A supplier offers a discount on a bulk order that the business can't pass up but doesn't have the working capital to fund.
  • Equipment opportunity. Critical kit becomes available at a price that won't last.
  • Bridge before refinance. Traditional refinancing is in progress but needs short-term liquidity to bridge the gap.

What unites these scenarios is urgency, not necessarily distress. Many opportunity cases involve healthy, profitable businesses that simply need to move faster than their bank can move.

Asset-based lending vs traditional bank lending

The most common comparison Australian business owners make is between asset-based lending and a bank loan. The two products solve different problems.

Traditional bank Asset-based lender
Assessment basis Credit, financials, security Asset value
Credit check Yes, full No
Financials required 2 years minimum None
Personal guarantees Usually required None
Property security Often required Not required
Time to funding 4–8 weeks Same day
Loan term 3–30 years 1–9 months
Rate Lowest Higher (priced for speed and risk)

Use a bank when financials are strong, time is not critical, and the funding need is long-term. Use an asset-based lender when speed matters, financial position is complicated, or the funding need is short-term and tied to a specific event. For a deeper breakdown across cost, speed and decision criteria, see our full guide on asset-based lending vs traditional bank lending.

Asset-based lending vs cash flow lending

A more technical comparison is between asset-based lending and cash flow lending, which is how most Australian non-bank business lenders (Bizcap, Prospa, Moula, ScotPac) operate.

Cash flow lenders advance funds based on the business's revenue, trading history and ability to service the loan from future income. Loans are typically unsecured against any specific asset, with the borrower's bank statements, BAS and trading record forming the assessment. Approval is faster than a bank (often days, not weeks) but slower than asset-based lending (which is hours).

Asset-based lenders, by contrast, don't assess cash flow or trading history. They assess the asset. This matters in two specific situations:

  • The business has weak or messy financials but a strong asset. Cash flow lenders need bank statements showing trading; asset-based lenders don't.
  • The business has decent financials but needs to move faster than a cash flow lender can move. Asset-based lending is structurally faster because there's less to assess.

The trade-off is rate. Cash flow lenders price for trading-record risk; asset-based lenders price for asset risk plus speed. Neither is inherently cheaper. It depends on the borrower's profile. For a full comparison covering scenarios, costs and how to choose, see our guide on asset-based lending vs cash flow lending.

Asset-based lending vs asset finance

This distinction matters because the two terms sound similar but describe opposite products.

Asset finance is the financing of a new asset purchase. A chattel mortgage, hire purchase, equipment lease or vehicle loan are all forms of asset finance. The borrower is buying something, and the lender provides the funding (usually with the new asset itself as security).

Asset-based lending is the use of an existing asset to access cash. The borrower already owns the asset and is using it to secure short-term capital for an unrelated purpose. The asset is not being purchased; it is being leveraged.

Asset finance: "I want to buy this truck." Asset-based lending: "I own this truck. I need cash for something else."

In practice, the two products are complementary. A business might use asset finance to purchase equipment over five years, then use asset-based lending against that same equipment three years later if a short-term cash need arises. Different tools, different jobs. Read our full breakdown of asset-based lending vs asset finance for scenarios, comparison tables and how the two work together.

What assets can be used as security?

Australian asset-based lenders accept a broad range of asset classes, provided the asset is unencumbered (not already used as security elsewhere) and can be reliably valued. The common categories are:

  • Vehicles and transport: Cars, trucks, prime movers, trailers, commercial vehicles, classic cars.
  • Yellow goods and earthmoving equipment: Excavators, loaders, dozers, graders, dump trucks.
  • Manufacturing and industrial equipment: Production machinery, CNC machines, fabrication kit, packaging lines.
  • Agricultural equipment: Tractors, harvesters, sprayers, livestock equipment.
  • Marine and aviation: Vessels, aircraft.
  • Inventory and stock: Held inventory with verifiable wholesale value.
  • Watches and gold: Investment-grade timepieces, gold bullion, precious metals.
  • Art, collectibles and memorabilia: Investment-grade fine art, collectibles with auction comparables.

The asset can be owned by the business or personally by a director. Where a personal asset secures a business loan, the borrower remains the business. The personal asset is collateral only, not a consumer credit transaction.

The two threshold questions a lender will ask: is it unencumbered, and can we value it? If yes, it's typically lendable.

Cost and terms in Australia

Asset-based lending sits between bank rates and unsecured non-bank rates. It is priced higher than a bank loan (reflecting the speed and the underwriting model) and lower than a fully unsecured non-bank loan (reflecting the security held).

Typical Australian asset-based lending terms:

  • Loan size: $20,000 to $1 million
  • Loan-to-value ratio (LVR): Up to 70% of independently valued asset value
  • Term: 1 to 9 months
  • Minimum commitment: Typically 1 month, with the ability to repay early after that
  • Settlement: Same-day once the asset is secured; typical 24 to 48 hours from enquiry
  • Pricing: Disclosed in full on the indicative term sheet, usually issued within 2 hours of enquiry

Rate is the wrong first question. The right first question is: what is the cost of not having the cash? If the deal closes Friday, the rate matters less than the timeline. If the ATO is escalating, the rate matters less than the resolution. Asset-based lending is priced for the situations where timing dominates the decision.

Asset-based lending in Australia

The Australian asset-based lending market has grown significantly over the last decade as banks have tightened commercial lending criteria and as private credit has expanded as an asset class. According to industry research, around four in five Australian SMEs experience cash flow pressure in any given year, and a meaningful share of those businesses are asset-rich but cash-poor, which is exactly the borrower profile asset-based lending serves.

Regulatorily, commercial asset-based lenders in Australia operate under ASIC oversight and are bound by anti-money laundering, KYC and consumer protection requirements where applicable. The lending itself is commercial (B2B), not consumer credit, even where a director uses a personally-owned asset to secure a business loan.

The market is served by a small group of dedicated asset lenders and asset lending companies alongside larger private credit funds. ABL is Australia's dedicated commercial cash-out specialist, operating from 11 locations across the country, with backing from FC Capital as a funding warehouse partner. Most asset-based lending in Australia is intermediated through finance brokers, accountants and advisors, who introduce borrowers to lenders for fast resolution of urgent funding needs.

Frequently asked questions

Is asset-based lending the same as a caveat loan?

No. A caveat loan is secured by registering a caveat over real property (usually the borrower's home or commercial property). Asset-based lending is secured against movable assets (equipment, vehicles, inventory, etc.) and does not require property. The two products serve different borrowers: caveat loans for property owners, asset-based lending for asset-rich businesses without property to spare.

Will asset-based lending affect my credit score?

Generally no. Most Australian asset-based lenders do not run credit enquiries to assess applications and do not report loans to credit bureaus. The borrower's credit file is typically unaffected by applying, borrowing or repaying. This is one of the practical advantages of the model for businesses with existing credit complications.

How is the asset value determined?

By independent valuation, usually performed by a licensed valuer or auction specialist (such as Lloyds Auctioneers in ABL's case). The valuation establishes the wholesale or forced-sale value of the asset, which is the basis for the loan advance (typically up to 70% of that value).

What happens if I can't repay?

The lender sells the asset to recover the loan balance. Any surplus from the sale returns to the borrower. Most reputable asset-based lenders work with borrowers to extend or refinance where possible, treating asset sale as a last resort rather than a first move.

Can sole traders and trusts use asset-based lending?

Yes. Asset-based lending is available to all commercial entity types: companies, sole traders, partnerships and trusts. The structure of the borrower does not change the lending decision because the assessment is asset-based, not entity-based.

Can I get an asset-based loan with bad credit?

Yes, in most cases. Because asset-based lenders do not run credit checks, bad credit history, defaults, missed payments and even Director Penalty Notices do not automatically disqualify a borrower. The decision is based on the asset, not the credit file. See our dedicated guide on no credit check business loans for more detail.

Who are the asset lenders in Australia?

Asset lenders in Australia are non-bank commercial lenders that provide loans secured against business or personal assets rather than against credit history or financial statements. The market is served by a small number of dedicated asset lenders — including ABL as Australia's dedicated commercial cash-out specialist — alongside larger private credit funds that occasionally take asset security as part of broader lending mandates.

What are asset lending companies and how do they work?

Asset lending companies assess loans based on the value of an asset offered as security, not the borrower's financial profile. The asset is held or monitored during the loan term and released once the loan is repaid. Australian asset lending companies typically offer loans from $20,000 to $1 million with terms of 1 to 9 months, with same-day settlement once the asset is secured.

Is business asset lending the same as asset-based lending?

Yes. Business asset lending, asset-based lending, asset-backed finance and cash-out lending are different names for the same category of commercial funding. The loan is assessed against, and secured by, an asset owned by the business or its directors. The phrase "business asset lending" emphasises the commercial (B2B) nature of the product, distinguishing it from consumer-facing asset-secured loans like personal pawn or vehicle title loans.
Asset Based Lending

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